Abstract

The Barbarine sheep is characterised by a fat-tail, whose mass varies between 1 and 4 kg. Its management is traditionally based on spring mating. The ability of this fat-tailed ewe to mobilise its body reserves has been demonstrated in lactation and the dry period by experimentally varying the food supply. The severely underfed ewe (200 g oat hay) can survive 161 days and lose 36% of its body weight (BW), with a change of 8.8 kg of dissected adipose tissue (AT) and 3.4 kg of muscle. It reached this stage with an empty BW of 24 kg containing 12% of AT. The fat tail exerts a role as a body reserve mainly through its mass rather than through its ability to be rapidly mobilised. In such situations, plasma NEFA and 3-hydroxybutyrate concentrations are first almost doubled, then decline in permanently underfed ewes, showing the ability of Barbarine ewes to adjust their lipid metabolite concentration in order to limit the toxic effects of high concentrations and therefore prolong survival. By the end of a re-feeding period, Barbarine ewes returned to their initial BW, lipid and protein mass. This breed has a good fertility, which can, however, be depressed in cases of undernutrition. However, if the mating period is extended, the overall reproductive performance is generally satisfactory. Poor nutrition during pregnancy may reduce lamb birth weight and affect subsequent growth, however, in traditional conditions, ewe and lamb mortality rates are surprisingly low in this breed. In normal birth weighted lambs, the post-weaning growth performances of grazing lambs are moderate but in feedlot conditions the conversion rate is rather low and carcass adiposity is high. This review shows that the Barbarine sheep, and specially the ewe, is well adapted to the local conditions mainly because of its high fertility and its ability to deposit and mobilise body reserves.

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